Shut Up Legs
Down Under Member
The total weight of mine is about 87kg. That's typically what I'm dragging up the hills, and includes the bike, attachments and myself. Any other weight measurement is pointless.
Try standing and report back.My Defy 1 carbon seems heavy compared to these weights @ 79 Kg.
Am I supposed to be sitting on it ??
Buy what's that got to do with the weight of your bike?No it's not. Climbing has little to do with weight and more to do with power-weight ratio. I weigh in at 104kg but I'm fairly handy at going up hills.
Not a lot but then I don't think the weight of a bike has that much to do with anything. It's a small percentage of the total weight.Buy what's that got to do with the weight of your bike?
True, and I agree with you (but let's not forget the title of the thread!) The weight of the bike is largely irrelevant. However, a lighter bike does feel different, but that doesn't necessarily mean it's all that much faster. I'm sure I read somewhere that weight saved on wheels and tyres is worth 4 times that of the rider/bike weight saving.Not a lot but then I don't think the weight of a bike has that much to do with anything. It's a small percentage of the total weight.
The weight of the rims and the tyres is probably quite important though cos there's all complicated maths to do with inertia etc that involves multiplications and things.
Do you believe this (ie what you say you've read somewhere) and if so, please explain what 'worth 4 times' means in reality, and how that 'worth' presents itself when riding?I read somewhere that weight saved on wheels and tyres is worth 4 times that of the rider/bike weight saving.
I have just weighed my 1970's Holdsworth Record.
Total weight 10.2 KGS.
To get the bike above the UCI minimum, obviously.Why in earth would you want to make your bike heavier?
No, I don't generally believe most things I read with regard to improving cycling performance etc, as it's usually to try and sell something. However it's totally conceivable that the best way to shed weight in climbing terms would be from the parts of the bike that actually move. The '4 times' bit though is just something I read, not something I would take as factual.Do you believe this (ie what you say you've read somewhere)